S-3885.1 _______________________________________________
SENATE BILL 6512
_______________________________________________
State of Washington 56th Legislature 2000 Regular Session
By Senators Bauer, Horn, Kohl‑Welles, Sheahan and Winsley
Read first time 01/18/2000. Referred to Committee on Higher Education.
AN ACT Relating to the tuition recovery trust fund; and amending RCW 28C.10.084.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
Sec. 1. RCW 28C.10.084 and 1999 c 321 s 3 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) The agency shall establish, maintain, and administer a tuition recovery trust fund. All funds collected for the tuition recovery trust fund are payable to the state for the benefit and protection of any student or enrollee of a private vocational school licensed under this chapter, or, in the case of a minor, his or her parents or guardian, for purposes including but not limited to the settlement of claims related to school closures under subsection (10) of this section and the settlement of claims under RCW 28C.10.120. The fund shall be liable for settlement of claims and costs of administration but shall not be liable to pay out or recover penalties assessed under RCW 28C.10.130 or 28C.10.140. No liability accrues to the state of Washington from claims made against the fund.
(2)
By June 30, 1998, a minimum operating balance of one million dollars shall be
achieved in the fund and maintained thereafter. If disbursements reduce the
operating balance below two hundred thousand dollars at any time before June
30, 1998, or below one million dollars thereafter, each participating ((entity))
owner shall be assessed a pro rata share of the deficiency created,
based upon the incremental scale created under subsection (6) of this section for
each private vocational school. The agency shall adopt schedules of times
and amounts for effecting payments of assessment.
(3)
In order for a private vocational school to be and remain licensed under
this chapter each ((entity)) owner shall, in addition to other
requirements under this chapter, make cash deposits on behalf of the school
into a tuition recovery trust fund as a means to assure payment of claims
brought under this chapter.
(4)
The amount of liability that can be satisfied by this fund on behalf of each ((individual
entity)) private vocational school licensed under this chapter shall
be ((established by the agency, based on an incremental scale that
recognizes the average)) the amount of unearned prepaid tuition in
possession of the ((entity. However, the minimum amount of liability for
any entity shall not be less than five thousand dollars. The upper limit of
liability is reestablished after any disbursements are made to settle an
individual claim or class of claims)) owner.
(5)
The fund's liability with respect to each participating ((entity)) private
vocational school commences on the date of ((its)) the owner's
initial deposit into the fund and ceases one year from the date ((it)) the
school is no longer licensed under this chapter.
(6)
The agency shall adopt by rule a matrix for calculating the deposits into the
fund ((required of each entity)) on behalf of each vocational school.
Proration shall be determined by factoring the ((entity's)) school's
share of liability in proportion to the aggregated liability of all
participants under the fund by grouping such prorations under the incremental
scale created by subsection (4) of this section. Expressed as a percentage of
the total liability, that figure determines the amount to be contributed when
factored into a fund containing one million dollars. The total amount of its
prorated share, minus the amount paid for initial capitalization, shall be
payable in up to twenty increments over a ten-year period, commencing with the
sixth month after the ((entity)) owner makes its initial
capitalization deposit on behalf of the school. Additionally, the
agency shall require deposits for initial capitalization, under which the
amount each ((entity)) owner deposits is proportionate to ((its))
the school's share of two hundred thousand dollars, employing the matrix
developed under this subsection. The amount thus established shall be
deposited by each applicant for initial licensing before the issuance of such
license.
(7)
No vested right or interests in deposited funds is created or implied for the
depositor, either at any time during the operation of the fund or at any such
future time that the fund may be dissolved. All funds deposited are payable to
the state for the purposes described under this section. The agency shall
maintain the fund, serve appropriate notices to affected ((entities)) owners
when scheduled deposits are due, collect deposits, and make disbursements to
settle claims against the fund. When the aggregated deposits total five million
dollars and the history of disbursements justifies such modifications, the
agency may at its own option reduce the schedule of deposits whether as to
time, amount, or both and the agency may also entertain proposals from among
the licensees with regard to disbursing surplus funds for such purposes as
vocational scholarships.
(8)
Based on annual financial data supplied by the ((entity)) owner,
the agency shall determine whether the increment assigned to that ((entity))
private vocational school on the incremental scale established under
subsection (6) of this section has changed. If an increase or decrease in
gross annual tuition income has occurred, a corresponding change in ((its))
the school's incremental position and contribution schedule shall be made
before the date of ((its)) the owner's next scheduled deposit
into the fund. Such adjustments shall only be calculated and applied annually.
(9)
((No deposits made into the fund by an entity are transferable.)) If
the majority ownership interest in ((an entity)) a private vocational
school is conveyed through sale or other means into different ownership,
all contributions made to the date of transfer ((accrue to)) remain
in the fund. The new owner ((commences contributions under provisions
applying to a new applicant, except that if ownership of an entity is
transferred to an immediate family member,)) shall continue to make
contributions to the fund until the original ten-year cycle is completed. All
tuition recovery trust fund contributions shall remain with the ((entity))
private vocational school transferred, and no additional cash deposits
may be required beyond the original ten-year contribution cycle.
(10) To settle claims adjudicated under RCW 28C.10.120 and claims resulting when a private vocational school ceases to provide educational services, the agency may make disbursements from the fund. Students enrolled under a training contract executed between a school and a public or private agency or business are not eligible to make a claim against the fund. In addition to the processes described for making reimbursements related to claims under RCW 28C.10.120, the following procedures are established to deal with reimbursements related to school closures:
(a) The agency shall attempt to notify all potential claimants. The unavailability of records and other circumstances surrounding a school closure may make it impossible or unreasonable for the agency to ascertain the names and whereabouts of each potential claimant but the agency shall make reasonable inquiries to secure that information from all likely sources. The agency shall then proceed to settle the claims on the basis of information in its possession. The agency is not responsible or liable for claims or for handling claims that may subsequently appear or be discovered.
(b) Thirty days after identified potential claimants have been notified, if a claimant refuses or neglects to file a claim verification as requested in such notice, the agency shall be relieved of further duty or action on behalf of the claimant under this chapter.
(c)
After verification and review, the agency may disburse funds from the tuition
recovery trust fund to settle or compromise the claims. However, the liability
of the fund for claims against the closed ((entity)) school shall
not exceed the ((maximum amount of liability assigned to that entity under
subsection (6) of this section)) amount of unearned prepaid tuition in
the possession of the owner.
(d)
In the instance of claims against a closed school, the agency shall seek to
recover such disbursed funds from the assets of the defaulted ((entity))
owner, including but not limited to asserting claims as a creditor in
bankruptcy proceedings.
(11)
When funds are disbursed to settle claims against a ((current licensee))
licensed private vocational school, the agency shall make demand upon
the ((licensee)) owner for recovery. The agency shall adopt
schedules of times and amounts for effecting recoveries. An ((entity's))
owner's failure to perform subjects ((its)) the school's
license to suspension or revocation under RCW 28C.10.050 in addition to any
other available remedies.
(12) For purposes of this section, "owner" includes, but is not limited to, a person, company, firm, society, association, partnership, corporation, or trust having a controlling ownership interest in a private vocational school.
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